Archive for the ‘writing’ Category

  • In another world…

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    …I’d be taking photos like these.

    If things work out they way I want them to by the 3rd quarter of 2009, I’d be a happy owner of a new dslr… or a laptop, whichever’s more affordable hehe:)

    OR I could just save up that money to build my own dark room.

    I miss the smell of the developer, the fixer, the feel of the chemicals in my hands, the photo paper and of course, I miss the shoots. I miss going to Hidalgo. I miss taking photos. I miss my camera. I miss being a photography major.  I miss photography:(

  • Top 10 Most Irritating Phrases

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    Oxford University recently compiled a list of the most irritating phrases ever. They are the most annoying, overly used or more often than not, misused phrases. Educate thyself!

    The top ten most irritating phrases:

    1 – At the end of the day (GAD I hate this with a passion)

    2 – Fairly unique

    3 – I personally

    4 – At this moment in time

    5 – With all due respect

    6 – Absolutely

    7 – It’s a nightmare

    8 – Shouldn’t of

    9 – 24/7

    10 – It’s not rocket science

    Standing in line: Ironically, Literally, Synergy.

     

    Source

  • is this how outsourcing goes?

    0

     I got a lot of crap to unload on people who post stuff like this:

    Looking for full-time web content writers

    Full time (home-based) – minimum of one month contract

    8 articles a day with two days off each week (500 words per article or equivalent) – P15,000 / month

    5 articles a day with two days off each week (500 words per article or equivalent) – P10,000 / month

    Requirements:

    1. Must follow web content writing standards (a guide will be provided)
    2. Must meet everyday deadlines (will be agreed upon)
    3. Excellent writing skills / unique writing style
    4. Has excellent online research skills / resourceful
    5. Must be able to proofread his/her own work before submitting
    6. Must not plagiarize, in any way

    Please send resume and sample work via..

    Geez. 2 days off? OMIGAD! OMIGAD I’m hyperventilating…

    Cmon! P80-90 per article? Do you know how much work is involved in writing an article that is 500 words and more (especially ones you don’t like to write about..?) Those articles aren’t plagiarized (as whoever you are has stated), everything is original and you’ll pay crap for them? Whoever posted this deserves crappy articles taken from spammy blogs everywhere.

    Unless this is the way outsourcing goes.

    What a sad day for writers everywhere.

  • the boss of my dreams

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    A day after I informed the people here at the office of my resignation, I stumbled upon a great article at www.inc.com about “The Habits of Highly Successful Bosses“. Memories of former bosses and current ones rushed back into my head – did they measure up to the successful boss illustrated in this article? So I decided to dissect each and every boss and see if they were brilliant examples to me, an aspiring boss (with my time spent on mobster in facebook, maybe I’d be a better off as a mob boss than a real office boss nyahahaha). Of course I won’t write down here WHO made it to the list, or who didn’t – my bosses should know for themselves if they were successful as “bosses” or not :P

    According to the article…

    Great bosses get the small picture (just because it works for the people in the IT department, doesn’t mean it will work for the accounting department – people experience things according to their perspective, and great bosses understand that)

    Great bosses make people feel smart(you don’t have to tell me it’s a bad idea, let’s work it out so I can still come out with my head held up high)

    Great bosses know who does what (the proliferation of “teams” has eclipsed individual effort, but great bosses know what and who to praise individually. Appreciation men!)

    Great bosses know when they’re not wanted (they know that their employees are susceptible to slacking off, but are also responsible enough to finish their work – and they don’t need to be reminded of that – unless your employees are from dumbnation.)

    Great bosses remember (personal information about their employees. “hey Ven, how’s your… cuticle doing?)

    Truth be told, I have no idea if I’ve met the boss of my dreams – it’s like meeting your soulmate… you just know. Not to discount the contributions of my former and current bosses to what I am now – whether it’s making me so frigging used to cutting and pasting stuff, trying to appease a client’s irrational demands while  my boss hides in his room, to reading on stuff I never knew existed – I think they’re all great and, in one way or another (whether they were a dream or a nightmare to work with), had imparted something of themselves to make me the person I am now.

    For that I am grateful.

    How about you? Have you met the boss of your dreams?

  • Writings On The Wall

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    ven santosIf there’s something I’m highly insecure about, it would be my writing. I’ve never won any awards, nor have I been recognized in my field for being the best damn writer that walked with cute shoes. My parents aren’t exactly from the creative field – my father is licensed chemical engineer, and my mother is a political science graduate – so there, nothing in my carefully constructed DNA hinted at creativity.

    School didn’t help much either. I’ve never had a GREAT grade for writing – more of just okay. And oh how we hate it when people tell us something is okay – coz  it doesn’t describe anything. I’ve never written for any kind of school organ, although during my highschool years, I did manage to “publish” a newsletter for our school bus – it ran for 2 editions, and I eventually ran out of lunch money to have it photocopied to distribute to my busmates.

    I did take a creative writing elective in senior highschool and I have to say, my confidence in writing gained momentum because of my professor. She didn’t tell you your writing sucked – whereas other teachers condemned, she encouraged. She was passionate about writing and she shared this with us – and that kind of behavior, set upon a disgruntled, unguided 15 yr old girl can be contagious. So even if my writing did suck, I still wrote anyway. In my 26 years of life, I’d have to say she knew exactly what her profession demanded of her – she didn’t just check papers, or exams, she taught, she motivated, and she was exactly what a teacher should be (she doesn’t teach anymore though – too much politics in school, blegh!).

    College was fun – well the first few terms! My professors in my minor subjects were easy to please – just write something decent and you’d get a 4.0(the highest score in my university). However, while majoring in communication arts, my department professors rejected my “attempt” to get into the journalism program (although I think I would have DIED if I had to answer to THAT certain prof – my professors in the Photography department were, and I still believe, the best even if they did give me a difficult time – and they didn’t have to brag about it every first frigging day of class). So instead of getting better in writing, I learned photography, and to this day, I have no regrets getting into the program. I love photography for all the yellowness it caused my garments while in the darkroom.

    So you see, there wasn’t really any time for me to improve my writing in school. It changed when I landed a job as a content writer. As a content writer churning out articles every week for topics I have absolutely no interest on, I got to practice on my writing. I did a bit of self study too – reading is a writer’s bestfriend. To be a better writer, a wise man said, you have to be knowledgeable on a lot of things. Not a rocket scientist, but knowledgeable.

    Now to develop a writing style or a voice requires more hard work, and one can get caught up in a pool of insecurity (I suck, my writing’s not good enough, I am not as good as Edgar Allan Poe, or as witty as some other writer, nobody gives a fudge what I write boohoooo), but further reading says, it’s good to aspire to become as great as Shakespeare or Sugarman, but one should always aspire to be one’s self when writing. Insecurity can be our worst enemy and best friend. Our worst enemy because it can completely halt whatever improvements we’ve set upon ourselves, and our best friend because for some people, seeing all those obstacles and self-demeaning notions can spark passion and aspire anyone to become better(although it takes a certain kind of person to see past all the insecurities).

    I’m not writing this to let you know that I’m the best damn writer this world has seen walking with cute shoes, but everytime I write an article, I know nobody can produce what I’ve produced – because I wrote that, not someone else. Whatever style, direction, architecture of sentences my writing has, it’s entirely mine. I’m not the best writer – but I aspire to be – and I really don’t want to tell the world, hey notice me, I’m a writer, because I don’t want to be defined by what I do for a living, or my passions (since I’m passionate about a lot of things) – neither is this cop-out, an excuse for all my writing blunders in the past.

    I know I have a long way to go – so everyday I try to write something, either by blogging, or when I’m struck by inspiration I just start scrawling on my notebook. After all, practice makes perfect. I read and read and read (and if ever this isn’t the real world as defined by The Matrix, I’d happily take the bitter pill to reality and have those ebooks zapped into my brain just like that!).

    I wasn’t born into creativity, so I make do with what I have and just augment in the process. Let’s put it this way: Faking it till you make it is good, but practicing till you make it is even better.

    To quote Daphne Gray-Grant, on her article in MarketingProfs:

    You’re you. You’re unique. And there’s great value in that.”

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